Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

New Vortex Black Bimini Top 12' Long, 97-103" Wide 4 Bow Pontoon/deck Boat on 2040-parts.com

US $319.00
Location:

Florence, Alabama, US

Florence, Alabama, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:Please contact us if you feel the need to return something. We will be glad to help. Any returned item must be accompanied by a RMA number that is issued by VortexDirect. We must issue you a RMA in order to properly process your return. Please contact us via phone or email if you need to return something. Again, we will be glad to help. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No

Ford teams with Azure for hybrid F-Series Super Duty trucks

Thu, 28 Jul 2011

Ford Motor Co., moving to expand its hybrid truck lineup, has signed a deal with Azure Dynamics Corp. to put plug-in hybrid powertrains in F-Series Super Duty trucks. Azure will retrofit the F-350, F-450 and F-550 trucks with its hybrid-electric drive trains.

CCS Ford Model T project

Fri, 13 Jun 2008

This past semester, eleven junior-level College for Creative Studies (CCS) Transportation Design students were asked to reinterpret an automotive icon: the Ford Model T. Over the course of the 16-week semester the students created 11 different concepts for a Model T for the future without forgetting the underlying principle - creating an icon that would have equal significance and social impact like the 100 year old original.   On April 30 each of the students presented their research, sketches, renderings and one- quarter scale models judged by Peter Horbury, Ford Executive Director of Design, The Americas and Pat Schiavone, Ford's Design Director for North America Trucks and CUVs. The winning concept, which the judges thought best embodied the spirit, innovation and sociological impact equal to that of the original Model T, was created by Dong Tran, of Cicero, New York.

P1 reborn: the return of the P1 supercar club

Fri, 23 Oct 2009

There's been a whopping great global recession, in case you hadn't noticed. P1, which was Britain's original supercar club, was struggling to repay asset finance repayments of £100,000 a month to fund its fleet of droolworthy cars – and nobody would buy supercars when P1 tried to sell. The market for top-end cars had frozen at the exact time that P1 most desperately needed the dosh.Eventually the banks called the loans in, as they had identified the supercar market as wobbly business they didn't want during a banking crisis.